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Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro

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Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro. / Brown, J.L.; Delaney, C.; Short, B. et al.
In: mSphere, Vol. 5, No. 3, e00371-20, 24.06.2020.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Brown, JL, Delaney, C, Short, B, Butcher, MC, McKloud, E, Williams, C, Kean, R & Ramage, G 2020, 'Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro', mSphere, vol. 5, no. 3, e00371-20. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00371-20

APA

Brown, J. L., Delaney, C., Short, B., Butcher, M. C., McKloud, E., Williams, C., Kean, R., & Ramage, G. (2020). Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro. mSphere, 5(3), Article e00371-20. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00371-20

Vancouver

Brown JL, Delaney C, Short B, Butcher MC, McKloud E, Williams C et al. Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro. mSphere. 2020 Jun 24;5(3):e00371-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00371-20

Author

Brown, J.L. ; Delaney, C. ; Short, B. et al. / Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro. In: mSphere. 2020 ; Vol. 5, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{954405b8442e47f5aec832a095b67bf2,
title = "Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro",
abstract = " Candida auris is an enigmatic yeast that provides substantial global risk in health care facilities and intensive care units. A unique phenotype exhibited by certain isolates of C. auris is their ability to form small clusters of cells known as aggregates, which have been to a limited extent described in the context of pathogenic traits. In this study, we screened several nonaggregative and aggregative C. auris isolates for biofilm formation, where we observed a level of heterogeneity among the different phenotypes. Next, we utilized an RNA sequencing approach to investigate the transcriptional responses during biofilm formation of a nonaggregative and aggregative isolate of the initial pool. Observations from these analyses indicate unique transcriptional profiles in the two isolates, with several genes identified relating to proteins involved in adhesion and invasion of the host in other fungal species. From these findings, we investigated for the first time the fungal recognition and inflammatory responses of a three-dimensional skin epithelial model to these isolates. In these models, a wound was induced to mimic a portal of entry for C. auris We show that both phenotypes elicited minimal response in the model minus induction of the wound, yet in the wounded tissue, both phenotypes induced a greater response, with the aggregative isolate more proinflammatory. This capacity of aggregative C. auris biofilms to generate such responses in the wounded skin highlights how this opportunistic yeast is a high risk within the intensive care environment where susceptible patients have multiple indwelling lines. IMPORTANCE Candida auris has recently emerged as an important cause of concern within health care environments due to its ability to persist and tolerate commonly used antiseptics and disinfectants, particularly when attached to a surface (biofilms). This yeast is able to colonize and subsequently infect patients, particularly those that are critically ill or immunosuppressed, which may result in death. We have undertaken analysis on two different phenotypic types of this yeast, using molecular and immunological tools to determine whether either of these has a greater ability to cause serious infections. We describe that both isolates exhibit largely different transcriptional profiles during biofilm development. Finally, we show that the inability to form small aggregates (or clusters) of cells has an adverse effect on the organism's immunostimulatory properties, suggesting that the nonaggregative phenotype may exhibit a certain level of immune evasion. ",
keywords = "aggregate, Candida auris, heterogeneity, host-pathogen interactions, in vitro skin model",
author = "J.L. Brown and C. Delaney and B. Short and M.C. Butcher and E. McKloud and C. Williams and R. Kean and G. Ramage",
year = "2020",
month = jun,
day = "24",
doi = "10.1128/mSphere.00371-20",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
journal = "mSphere",
issn = "2379-5042",
publisher = "NLM (Medline)",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Candida auris Phenotypic Heterogeneity Determines Pathogenicity In Vitro

AU - Brown, J.L.

AU - Delaney, C.

AU - Short, B.

AU - Butcher, M.C.

AU - McKloud, E.

AU - Williams, C.

AU - Kean, R.

AU - Ramage, G.

PY - 2020/6/24

Y1 - 2020/6/24

N2 - Candida auris is an enigmatic yeast that provides substantial global risk in health care facilities and intensive care units. A unique phenotype exhibited by certain isolates of C. auris is their ability to form small clusters of cells known as aggregates, which have been to a limited extent described in the context of pathogenic traits. In this study, we screened several nonaggregative and aggregative C. auris isolates for biofilm formation, where we observed a level of heterogeneity among the different phenotypes. Next, we utilized an RNA sequencing approach to investigate the transcriptional responses during biofilm formation of a nonaggregative and aggregative isolate of the initial pool. Observations from these analyses indicate unique transcriptional profiles in the two isolates, with several genes identified relating to proteins involved in adhesion and invasion of the host in other fungal species. From these findings, we investigated for the first time the fungal recognition and inflammatory responses of a three-dimensional skin epithelial model to these isolates. In these models, a wound was induced to mimic a portal of entry for C. auris We show that both phenotypes elicited minimal response in the model minus induction of the wound, yet in the wounded tissue, both phenotypes induced a greater response, with the aggregative isolate more proinflammatory. This capacity of aggregative C. auris biofilms to generate such responses in the wounded skin highlights how this opportunistic yeast is a high risk within the intensive care environment where susceptible patients have multiple indwelling lines. IMPORTANCE Candida auris has recently emerged as an important cause of concern within health care environments due to its ability to persist and tolerate commonly used antiseptics and disinfectants, particularly when attached to a surface (biofilms). This yeast is able to colonize and subsequently infect patients, particularly those that are critically ill or immunosuppressed, which may result in death. We have undertaken analysis on two different phenotypic types of this yeast, using molecular and immunological tools to determine whether either of these has a greater ability to cause serious infections. We describe that both isolates exhibit largely different transcriptional profiles during biofilm development. Finally, we show that the inability to form small aggregates (or clusters) of cells has an adverse effect on the organism's immunostimulatory properties, suggesting that the nonaggregative phenotype may exhibit a certain level of immune evasion.

AB - Candida auris is an enigmatic yeast that provides substantial global risk in health care facilities and intensive care units. A unique phenotype exhibited by certain isolates of C. auris is their ability to form small clusters of cells known as aggregates, which have been to a limited extent described in the context of pathogenic traits. In this study, we screened several nonaggregative and aggregative C. auris isolates for biofilm formation, where we observed a level of heterogeneity among the different phenotypes. Next, we utilized an RNA sequencing approach to investigate the transcriptional responses during biofilm formation of a nonaggregative and aggregative isolate of the initial pool. Observations from these analyses indicate unique transcriptional profiles in the two isolates, with several genes identified relating to proteins involved in adhesion and invasion of the host in other fungal species. From these findings, we investigated for the first time the fungal recognition and inflammatory responses of a three-dimensional skin epithelial model to these isolates. In these models, a wound was induced to mimic a portal of entry for C. auris We show that both phenotypes elicited minimal response in the model minus induction of the wound, yet in the wounded tissue, both phenotypes induced a greater response, with the aggregative isolate more proinflammatory. This capacity of aggregative C. auris biofilms to generate such responses in the wounded skin highlights how this opportunistic yeast is a high risk within the intensive care environment where susceptible patients have multiple indwelling lines. IMPORTANCE Candida auris has recently emerged as an important cause of concern within health care environments due to its ability to persist and tolerate commonly used antiseptics and disinfectants, particularly when attached to a surface (biofilms). This yeast is able to colonize and subsequently infect patients, particularly those that are critically ill or immunosuppressed, which may result in death. We have undertaken analysis on two different phenotypic types of this yeast, using molecular and immunological tools to determine whether either of these has a greater ability to cause serious infections. We describe that both isolates exhibit largely different transcriptional profiles during biofilm development. Finally, we show that the inability to form small aggregates (or clusters) of cells has an adverse effect on the organism's immunostimulatory properties, suggesting that the nonaggregative phenotype may exhibit a certain level of immune evasion.

KW - aggregate

KW - Candida auris

KW - heterogeneity

KW - host-pathogen interactions

KW - in vitro skin model

U2 - 10.1128/mSphere.00371-20

DO - 10.1128/mSphere.00371-20

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32581078

VL - 5

JO - mSphere

JF - mSphere

SN - 2379-5042

IS - 3

M1 - e00371-20

ER -